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So Brexit happened

"Waking up to a pound collapse and econ doom, Brits now frantically Googling to figure out what they've done," points outMSNBC's Joy Reid, sharing the news that 8 hours after polls closed, Google reported searches for "what happens if we leave the EU?" tripled. "Democracy in 2016: Vote first, Google later, hope for the best," freelance journalist Sarah Bennett sums things up. "This is not to suggest that any electorate is ever fully informed on anything, but COME ON," reacts Rebecca Tucker at Arts and Life. "One good reason why referendum on this kind of complex question a bad idea," concludes The Guardian's Jon Henley. "Sometimes data drives the best stories," observes Lauren Prince with Vice. Of course, data can be misconstrued, too. "Notion that googling EU means 'many Britons may not even know what they had actually voted for' is total bollocks," argues Toby Harnden at The Sunday Times. "I love the totally unfounded assumption that the Google queries must be coming from 'leave' voters," tweets Mark Perkins. If you're someone who's confused by Brexit -- on either side of the pond -- Vox has you covered in one chart.

Although it's worth pointing out Scotland voted to stay, and someone should tell Donald Trump that -- or rather, many Scots did tell him, and it was hard not to laugh. "Scottish insults are kind of amazing," realizes BuzzFeed's Jon Passantino. "Hard to say which v. Scottish insult directed at Trump is my favorite, but I think 'spoon'?" guesses colleague Kate Aurthur. While Trump has dubbed Brexit "a great thing," several interviews uncovered Brits who wish they voted to remain in the EU. "Someone *actually* feels 'robbed of their vote' because they believed Leave 'lies' & would now like to vote Remain," incredulously tweets The Telegraph's Kate McCann. Meanwhile, Miriam Elder argues that the real winner here is Vladimir Putin. "There’s nothing Putin loves more than chaos — and nothing he mistrusts more than Western alliances, Elder writes. "Good job everyone. Fantastic job. Look at what you've done," scolds BuzzFeed's Stacy-Marie Ishmael.

Our last question asked: After more than 70 years, an internal investigation by the Marine Corps just concluded it has been wrongly identifying what? It wrongly identified one of the men raising the flag in the iconic Iwo Jima photograph.

As for today's question, here it is: A new brand of glasses claims to correct what?

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A change in pace: Fox News is moving Jennifer Griffin (at right) to Clinton campaign detail. Previously the network's national security correspondent since 2007, Griffin will resume covering the Pentagon once the election ends.

New addition: Fast Company welcomes Ruth Reader as a writer. Reader joins from Mic, where she was a senior writer on the tech beat.

New to Beantown: Natasha Verma joins NBC Boston as a reporter. Verma hails from WBBH in Fort Myers, Fla., where she served as traffic reporter.

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